Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World

By Tom Holland

 Tom Holland is a British historian with significant credentials.  This is a large book that provides a sweeping history of how Christianity has affected the world.  The book is a tour de force with impressive scholarship.

Here’s the basic point of the book:  Christianity has had enormous influence in shaping the world.  He does not attempt a year-by-year or even century-by-century approach to this subject.  Rather, he chooses 21 examples, beginning with Athens in 479 B.C. and ending with Rostock, Germany in 2015.  He builds his case on these 21 examples of the influence of Christianity.  Each chapter is filled with fascinating anecdotes.

Here are a few key excerpts.

“How was it that a cult inspired by the execution of an obscure criminal in a long-vanished empire came to exercise such a transformative and enduring influence on the world?  To attempt an answer to this question, as I do in this book, is not to write a history of Christianity.  Rather than provide a panoramic survey of its evolution, I have sought instead to trace the currents of Christian influence that have spread most widely, and been most enduring into the present day” (p. 12).

“There are those who will  rejoice at this proposition; and there are those who will be appalled by it.  Christianity may be the most enduring and influential legacy of the ancient world, and its emergence the single most transformative development in Western history, but it is also the most challenging for a historian to write about” (p. 13).

“So profound has been the impact of Christianity on the development of Western civilization that it has come to be hidden from view.  It is the incomplete revolutions which are remembered; the fate of those which triumph is to be taken for granted.

“The ambition of Dominion is to trace the course of what one Christian, writing in the third century AD, termed ‘the flood-tide of Christ’:  how the belief that the Son of the one God of the Jews had been tortured to death on a cross came to be so enduringly and widely held that today most of us in the West are dulled to just how scandalous it originally was.  This book explores what it was that made Christianity so subversive and disruptive; how completely it came to saturate the mindset of Latin Christendom; and why, in a West that is often doubtful of religion’s claims, so many of its instincts remain – for good and ill – thoroughly Christian.

“It is – to coin a phrase – the greatest story ever told” (p. 17).

“To be a Christian is to believe that God became man and suffered a death as terrible as any mortal has ever suffered.  This is why the cross, that ancient implement of torture, remains what it has always been:  the fitting symbol of the Christian revolution.  It is the audacity of it – the audacity of finding in a twisted and defeated corpse the glory of the creator of the universe – that serves to explain, more surely than anything else, the sheer strangeness of Christianity, and of the civilization to which it gave birth.  Today, the power of this strangeness remains as alive as it has ever been.  It is manifest in the great surge of conversions that has swept Africa and Asia over the past century; in the conviction of missions upon millions that the breath of the Spirit, like a living fire, still blows upon the world; and, in Europe and North America, in the assumptions of many more millions who would never think to describe themselves as Christian.  All are heirs to the same revolution:  a revolution that has, at its molten heart, the image of a god dead on a cross” (pp. 540-541).

One interesting point:  Holland begins this book as an unbeliever.  He clearly moved towards the gospel by the end of the book.  Perhaps he has embraced the gospel by now.

Do I recommend this book? It is good, not great. Someone needs to have a serious interest in history before tackling it.

Dangerous Calling: Confronting the Unique Challenges of Pastoral Ministry

By Paul David Tripp

Written in 2012, this book is in some ways a prequel to his more recent book, Lead.  Whereas Lead focuses on the community of leaders and the culture they set, this book focuses on the pastor.

Tripp’s concern is not with ministry skills or leadership strategies, but with the pastor’s own spiritual life.  He calls the pastor to live a life of deep humility.  He calls the pastor to make sure that we are living for Christ’s kingdom, not for our kingdom, for Christ’s glory, not for our glory. The book includes an urgent call to prioritize our daily time with the Lord and not just focus on preparing for public ministry.  It is a call to be continually aware of our own sinfulness and the need we have to preach the gospel to ourselves.

Bavinck: A Critical Biography

By James Eglinton

This is a scholarly biography of the great Dutch theologian Herman Bavinck.  Born in 1854 and dying in 1921, Bavinck was a brilliant theologian who wrote extensively.  His most notable work is the four-volume Reformed Dogmatics, but he interacted with leading thinkers and philosophers of his day on a range of subjects.  He wrote voluminously.  He was also a close colleague of Abraham Kuyper.  Timothy Keller, in a blurb for the book, refers to Bavinck as the greatest reformed theologian of the 20th century.

It was interesting to learn about Bavinck’s life and contribution.  However, the book was overall disappointing.  Perhaps because this is a scholarly biography, there was little sense of his spiritual life, his marriage, and even his overall impact upon the world.

The Beginner’s Guide to Spiritual Gifts

By Sam Storms

Sam Storms is always biblical, insightful, honest, and practical in his books on the spiritual life.

This book is a 200-page overview of the gifts.  He particularly focuses on the gifts of wisdom and knowledge, faith and healing, miracles, prophecy and distinguishing spirits, tongues and interpretation.  In some ways this book is a simpler, briefer treatment of the sign gifts, whereas his subsequent book, Understanding Spiritual Gifts, is a more thorough and exhaustive treatment of all the gifts.

This is an excellent book for a beginner in obeying God’s Word to pursue spiritual gifts.  Highly recommended.

Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

By Dane Ortlund

This is a brief but superb book on the heart of Christ. He focuses on Matthew 11:29, where Jesus states that he is gentle and lowly in heart, the only passage where Jesus talks about his heart. But the book elaborates on Christ’s heart with 23 brief chapters, each one focusing on a verse that reflects the heart of Jesus.

In the last year or so, since the book has come out, it has had tremendous impact, and it lived up to its expectations with me. In fact, I would rate it as one of my top 10 books all-time – which includes the last 50 years of reading Christian books. I might even put it right there behind J.I. Packer’s Knowing God, along with A.W. Tozer’s The Knowledge of the Holy (ironically, Tozer’s superb little book also includes 23 brief chapters).

Ortlund knows his Bible inside and out and he loves Christ. He reflects the biblical perspective on God’s love and mercy to us – and he is also steeped in the Puritans, along with a few similar writers, who serve as guides to the heart of Jesus. These writers, Puritans and others, include Thomas Goodwin, John Bunyan, John Owen, Richard Sibbes, John Flavel, John Calvin, Martin Luther, Jonathan Edwards, and B.B. Warfield. Each of these preachers and writers were deep with God. Reading his excerpts makes me want to read these writers more.

It is not often that I read a book and immediately know that this book will merit multiple rereadings – not just a rereading but rereadings. This is such a book.

God will use this book powerfully in your life.

The publisher includes a dozen ringing endorsements from well-known Christian leaders. Here are a couple of them, just to whet your appetite:

“On the rough, rocky, and often dark path between the ‘already’ and the ‘not yet,’ there is nothing your weary heart needs more than to know the beauty of the heart of Jesus. It is that beauty that alone has the power to overwhelm all the ugly you will encounter along the way. I have read no book that more carefully, thoroughly, and tenderly displays Christ’s heart than what Dane Ortlund has written. As if I was listening to a great symphony, I was moved in different ways in different passages but left each feeling hugely blessed to know that what was being described was the heart of my Savior, my Lord, my Friend, and my Redeemer. I can’t think of anyone in the family of God who wouldn’t be greatly helped by spending time seeing the heart of Jesus through the eyes of such a gifted guide as Ortlund.”
--Paul David Tripp, President, Paul Tripp Ministries; author, New Morning Mercies and My Heart cries out

“Only a few pages in I started to realize how unusual and essential this book is – it is an exposition of the very heart of Christ. The result is a book that astonishes us with the sheer abundance and capacity of his love for us. Breathtaking and healing in equal measure, it is already one of the best books I’ve read.”
--Sam Allberry, Author, 7 Myths about Singleness